for investment.
See Investment
demand
for money.
See Money demand
Demand deposits, 84
Demand-pull inflation, 391
Demand shocks, 278, 279f, 279–280
AD-AS model and, 427–428, 428
f,
429f
Democracy in Deficit (Buchanan and
Wagner), 487
Denmark
Big Mac price and exchange rate in,
148t
devaluation by, 354
government debt of, 468t
inflation in, 145f
population growth and income per
person in, 215f
Depreciation, 136, 529
capital stock and, 195
in national income accounts, 30
Depreciation rate, 196
Depressions, 5, 6. See also Great
Depression
potential for, 331–332
Devaluation, 354
Dickens, William T., 106n
Diminishing marginal product, 52
Discounting, budget constraint and, 501
Discount rate, 553
Discouraged workers, 36, 179
Discretionary policy, time inconsistency
of, 454–456, 463–465
Discretion for conducting economic
policy, 453–459
Disinflation, rational expectations and,
396–398
Disposable income, 61
Disposable personal income, 31
Di Tella, Rafael, 184n
Dollarization, 364
Dominated assets, 557
Dominguez, Kathryn M., 449n
Dornbusch, Rudiger, 109n
Double coincidence of wants, 81
Douglas, Paul, 57
DRI. See Data Resources Incorporated
(DRI) model
DSGE. See Dynamic, stochastic, general
equilibrium (DSGE) models
Dual mandates, 435
Dulberger, Ellen, 35
Dynamic, stochastic, general equilib-
rium (DSGE) models, 439
Dynamic aggregate demand curve
(DAD), 420f, 420–421
Dynamic aggregate supply curve
(DAS), 418–419, 419
f
Earned income tax credit, 171
East Asian Tigers. See Hong Kong;
Singapore; South Korea; Taiwan
I N D E X
| 587
Council of Economic Advisers, 446
Country risk, interest rate differentials
and, 356
CPI. See Consumer price index (CPI)
Credit cards, 85
Credit conditions, inventory investment
and, 543–544
Credit crunches, 538–539
Credit risk, interest rates and, 64
Crowding out, 69
Currencies
appreciation of, 136
of China, fixing of, 350
depreciation of, 136
devaluation of, 354
exchange rates and. See Exchange
rates; Fixed exchange rates;
Floating exchange rates
Mexican fall in value of, 358–360
monetary unions and, 362–363
revaluation of, 354
underground economy and, 58
Currency, 84
Currency boards, 364
Currency-deposit ratio, 551
Current Population Survey, 36, 39,
171–172
Cyclically adjusted budget deficit, 476
Cyclical unemployment, 388
Czech Republic
Big Mac price and exchange rate in,
148t
government debt of, 468t
DAD. See Dynamic aggregate demand
curve (DAD)
DAS. See Dynamic aggregate supply
curve (DAS)
Data Resources Incorporated (DRI)
model, 317–318, 318t
Day of Reckoning (Friedman), 488
Debit cards, 85
Debt. See Budget deficits; Government
debt; Mortgage market
Debt finance, 69
Debt-inflation theory, 329–330
Deficits. See Budget deficits; Trade
deficits
Deflation, 6
destabilizing effects of, 329–331, 331f
stabilizing effects of, 329
Delta (
d
), 196
Demand
in AD-AS model, 410–411
aggregate. See Aggregate demand (AD)
consumption function and, 194–195
determinants of, 60–65
at equilibrium. See Equilibrium
for factors of production, 51–54
for goods and services, 60–65
for housing, residential investment
and, 540–541, 541f, 542f
Conference Board, 263, 264
Congressional Budget Office (CBO),
446, 471
TARP and, 475
Consols, 70
Constant returns to scale, 48
Consumer(s), future taxes and, 480–483
Consumer price index (CPI), 32–34
GDP deflator versus, 33–34, 34f
overstatement of inflation y, 35
price of basket of goods and, 32–33
Consumption, 27, 61–62, 62f, 495–522
average propensity to consume and,
496
of elderly, 512–513
of fixed capital, 30
instant gratification and, 519–521
intertemporal choice and. See
Intertemporal choice
life-cycle hypothesis of, 509–513
marginal propensity to consume and,
496
permanent-income hypothesis and,
514–516
predictable changes in income and,
518
random-walk hypothesis and,
516–518
Consumption function, 61–62, 62
f,
496–500
consumption puzzle and, 498–500,
499f
demand for goods and, 194–195
early empirical successes with,
497–498
Keynes’s conjectures and, 496–497,
497f
secular stagnation and, 498
Consumption puzzle, 498–500, 499f
Consumption smoothing, 506
Continental Congress, 93
Contingent liabilities, 474
Convergence, 226–227
conditional, 227
Core inflation, 33
Corporate income tax, investment and,
532–533
Cost(s)
of capital.
See Cost of capital
of expected inflation, 102–103
of holding money, 98
of hyperinflation, 106–107
of inflation, 572–573
of reducing inflation, 572–573
social, of inflation, 100–105
of unexpected inflation, 103–104
Costa Rica, population growth and
income per person in, 215f
Cost of capital, 528–529
real, 530
Cost-push inflation, 391
Cote d’Ivoire, population growth and
income per person in, 215f
East Asian Tigers, economic growth in,
251–252
ECB.
See European Central Bank
(ECB)
Economic fluctuations, 257–284.
See
also Business cycle(s); Depressions;
Great Depression; Real-business-
cycle theory; Recessions
aggregate demand and, 269–271
aggregate supply and, 271–277
banking crises and, 538–539
stabilization policy and, 278–283
time horizons and, 265–269
Economic forecasting, 448–450
mistakes in, 449–450, 450f
Economic growth, 221–245
accounting for sources of. See
Growth accounting
allocating investment and, 232–233
in East Asian Tigers, 251–252
endogenous growth theory and. See
Endogenous growth theory
free trade and, 228–229
in Germany, 200, 201
institutions and, 234–235
in Japan, 200, 201
long-run, AD-AS model and, 423f,
423–424
promotion of, 570–571
saving and, 200–201, 201f
saving rate and, 230–232
Solow growth model and. See Capital
accumulation; Solow growth
model
in United States, 251, 251t
worldwide slowdown during
1972-1995, 236–238, 237t
Economic indicators. See also Leading
indicators
stock market as, 534–536, 535f
Economic models, 7–13, 8f –10f. See
also specific models
big, comprehensive, 405–408, 407f
endogenous and exogenous variables
and, 8, 8f
microeconomics and, 13
multiple, 12
policy analysis with, 317–318, 318t
simplifying assumptions and, 11–12
Economic policy. See also Fiscal policy;
Monetary policy; Public policy;
Stabilization policy; Trade policy
distrust of policymakers and political
process and, 453–454
historical record and, 451–452
lags in implementation and effects of,
447–448
Lucas critique and, 450–451
rule versus discretion for conducting,
453–459
stabilization. See Stabilization policy
Economic profit, 56
definition of, 55
Economies
closed, 61
open, 61, 119–150. See also Exchange
rates; International flows of capi-
tal and goods; Large open
economies; Mundell-Fleming
model; Small open economies
of POW camps, 82
underground, 23, 58
Economists
tools of, 7–13
view of inflation, 101
Ecuador
inflation and money growth in, 92f
investment rate in, 202f
Edward III, King of England, 488
Efficiency of labor, 222–223
Efficiency wages, 174–175
Efficient markets hypothesis, 536–537
Egypt, Big Mac price and exchange
rate in, 148t
Eichengreen, Barry, 354n
Elderly people, consumption and saving
of, 512–513
El Salvador, investment rate in, 202f
Employment Act of 1946, 446
Endogenous growth theory, 238–243
basic model for, 239–240
creative destruction and, 242–243
research and development and,
241–242
two-sector model for, 240–241
Endogenous variables, 8, 8f
England. See also United Kingdom
default of, 488
Equilibrium, 65–73
changes in, 10f, 10–11
in financial markets, 67–68, 68f
fiscal policy and, 68–70
investment demand and, 72–73, 73f
Keynesian cross and, 291f, 291–292,
292f
long-run. See Long-run equilibrium
in market for goods and services, 66
short-run. See Short-run equilibrium
Equity finance, 69
Errors-in-variables problem, 515
Essay on the Funding System (Ricardo),
484
An Essay on the Principle of Population as
It Affects the Future Improvement of
Society (Malthus), 216–217
Ethiopia
investment rate in, 202
f, 203
population growth and income per
person in, 215f
Euler’s theorem, 55
Euro, 363
Euro Area. See also Europe; specific
countries
Big Mac price and exchange rate in,
148t
inflation and money growth in, 92f
Euro-Barometer Survey Series, 183
Europe. See also Euro Area; specific
countries
Black Death in, factor prices and, 56
rise of leisure in, 184f, 184–186
unemployment in, 180–184, 181f
European Central Bank (ECB), Fed
versus, 435
Ex ante real interest rate, 96–97
Excess reserves, 553
Exchange, money as medium of, 81
Exchange rates, 135–149
Big Mac prices and, 147–149, 148t
comparison of regimes, 361–366
expected changes in, interest rate dif-
ferentials and, 356–357
fixed. See Fixed exchange rates
floating. See Floating exchange rates
nominal. See Nominal exchange rates
purchasing power parity and,
145–147, 146f
real. See Real exchange rates
trade policies and, 141–143, 143f
Exogenous variables, 8, 8f
Expectations, adaptive, 390–391
AD-AS model and, 413
Expected inflation
AD-AS model and, 413
costs of, 102–103
Expenditure
circular flow and, 18–20, 19f
components of, 27–29, 29t
planned, Keynesian cross and,
289–291, 290f
Exports, net. See Net exports
Ex post real interest rate, 97
Factor prices, 49–50, 50f
Black Death and, 56
Factors of production. See also Capital;
Capital accumulation; Labor
accumulation of, production effi-
ciency versus, 227–228
decisions facing competitive firm
and, 50–51
definition of, 47
firm’s demand for, 51–54
increases in, economic growth and,
247–249
inventories as, 543
national income distribution to,
49–60
price level and, 89
prices of, 49–50, 50f, 56
Fair, Ray C., 449n
Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938, 170
Fama, Eugene, 537n
Fazzari, Steven M., 538n
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation,
554
Federal funds rate, 320–321
Taylor rule and, 415–416, 416f
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: